J.I. Packer

General Teachings/Activities

- J.I. Packer has authored many books, is a professor at the
neo-evangelical Regent College located in Vancouver, British Columbia, and is a
senior editor, Visiting Scholar, and Institute Fellow for the neo-evangelical
magazine Christianity Today. Over the years, Dr. Packer has become
increasingly neo-evangelical and ecumenical in his writings, his endorsements,
and his associations. Nevertheless, his reputation among the undiscerning
remains unscathed. Who among us has not heard at one time or another the retort,
"J.I. Packer endorsed that book; it must be okay"? As demonstrated in
this report, however, Packer will apparently endorse anyone, or speak in any
forum, as long as they or it claim(s) to be Christian.

- Even though much of what Packer has personally authored is well-written
and theologically sound (perhaps he is best known for Knowing God,
his classic on the attributes of God), he nevertheless interjects into many of
his later writings much of the "pop psychology"
gospel permeating evangelicalism today; e.g., Packer has evidently bought-into
the self-love
gospel (self-esteem, self-image, self-worth, self-forgiveness, self-etc.):

"However unloved and worthless we once felt, and however much
self-hate and condemnation we once nursed, we must now see that by
loving us enough to redeem us God gave us value, and by forgiving us
completely He obligated us to forgive ourselves and made it sin for us not
to" (Eternity, April 1988). (Emphases added.)

By definition, sin is the failure to obey a command of God, by not doing what
He requires or by doing what He forbids. Where in the Bible, then, are we
commanded to forgive ourselves? Nowhere! It is a dangerous thing, indeed, to
extrapolate a command to forgive ourselves from the fact that God forgives us --
it is putting commands in God's mouth and putting burdens on men's backs that
they need not bear. (From Jay E. Adams, From Forgiven To Forgiving,
pp. 66-69.) [Packer also evidently believes the blasphemy that we should forgive
God! This is evidenced by his endorsement of the James
Dobson' book that teaches this psychological concept (When God Doesn't
Make Sense). The very fact that we would have anger towards God, the One
Who can do no wrong and is perfect in every way, and that we would feel like we
need to forgive Him, is wickedness and a total affront to His holy, righteous
character!]

- Packer was the keynote speaker at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School's
[now Trinity International University (TIU) -- an Evangelical
Free Church-affiliated school] "Repentance, Holiness, and Power"
conference held 5/29/91-6/1/91. Other speakers at the conference were Catholiccharismatics
Michael Scanlan and Ann Shields. In the 6/22/92 Christianity Today,
Packer analyzes and praises the Catholic charismatic movement. He calls it,
"God's witness," "God's therapy," "God's cure,"
and "God's summons." He says: "Protestant and Catholic
charismatic teaching on the Christian life is to all intents and purposes
identical." Packer also seemed to defend Gordon College professor Thomas
Howard's 1985 conversion to Catholicism by saying it is nothing like the tragedy
of becoming a liberal (5/17/85, Christianity Today). Packer has
also stated that the charismatic movement "must be adjudged a work of
God" (7/15/89, Calvary
Contender), and that "Catholics are among the most loyal and
[spiritually] virile brothers evangelicals can find these days" (7/15/85, Christianity
Today).

- In the early-1990s, TIU' faculty member Murray J. Harris, Professor of
NT Exegesis and Theology, denied the Biblical teaching of the physical, material
nature of the resurrection body. This was specifically taught in Professor
Harris's 1987 book, Raised Immortal, and in his 1990 book, From
Grave to Glory. Harris taught that Christ did not rise immortal in
the same essentially physical body in which He died, and that Jesus does not
now have a body of physical "flesh and bones." This is nearly the
doctrine of Jehovah's
Witnesses. The key concern about Dr. Harris's 1990 book is that, in effect,
it teaches the annihilation, not the resurrection of the essentially physical
body of Jesus, and that it, therefore, serves to undermine the Biblical doctrine
of the present "incarnate" Christ. Like the JWs, Harris also claims
the Lord's appearances after His "resurrection" were
"materializations" and that the heavenly body is
"immaterial." [It appears not to concern Harris that historic,
orthodox Christianity has always held that Scripture teaches the necessity of
belief in the resurrection of Christ's body of "flesh" for salvation (Jn.
2:18-22; Lk. 24:36-39; Rom. 10:9; 1 Cor. 15:1-3,14, 17).] Also like the JWs,
Harris denies the resurrection of the believer's body from the grave; Harris
holds that the believer's resurrection body is by nature "invisible,"
"immaterial," and "spiritual," and that believers get it (in
this "immaterial" form, "qualitatively and numerically distinct
from the old body") at the moment of death, even though the real physical
body is still in the grave! [Harris apparently abandoned this latter view, but
the EFCA still holds it to be "orthodox."]

In a press release dated 9/24/92, Witness Inc., a major countercult ministry in
Clayton, CA, announced that it and 34 other leading countercult organizations
had taken a united stand against the doctrine of the resurrection as taught by
Harris (the number in the coalition had increased to 156 as of 1/96), saying
that it is not "orthodox" but "akin to the doctrine of the JW
cult." Nevertheless, Dr. Kenneth Meyer, president of Trinity at the time,
along with Dr. Harris in a 13-page letter, asked all E-Free Churches "to
respect and support" Trinity's judgment on Harris. Apparently, EFCA
leadership wanted their people to believe it is "orthodox" to hold
that Jesus does not now have a body of physical "flesh and
bones"; that at the time of each person's death, the believer's physical
body will be "replaced" by a form that is not essentially
material; and that it is "orthodox" to hold that the body that dies
remains forever in the grave, having been "replaced" by an
immaterial/invisible "spiritual" form. And, apparently, so does J.I.
Packer! He writes:

"The whole church benefits from the necessity laid on Professor Harris
to prove his orthodoxy in the matter of resurrection -- Christ's and ours.
This is a clear, warm-hearted book [From Grave to Glory], impeccable
in scholarship and inspiring to read. Resurrection questions are not easy,
and not all readers will agree with Professor Harris on every detail, but Harris
is undoubtedly in the main stream of resurrection faith, and there is no
more thorough treatment of the questions currently in print" (11/30/92, Christian
News -- from the back jacket of From Grave to Glory).
(Emphases added.)

Packer, in a 4/5/93 Christianity Today article (pp. 64-65), also
mentions the teachings of Origen as support for Harris. What Packer doesn't say
is that Origen's view of the resurrection was condemned by Church Councils as
deviations from Biblical truth. (In fact, with the exception of Origen, there
was not a single major church father that denied that Jesus was raised in His
same material body of flesh!) Yet Packer maintains, "The nature of the
resurrection bodies is so mysterious, being right outside our present
experience, that any theories about it must be tentative at best" (p. 64).
For J.I. Packer then, the belief in a resurrected Jesus of "flesh and
bones" is merely belief in a "tentative" theory! [The 6/17/93
issue of Christianity Today, after receiving much mail in protest
over Packer's statement, claimed that two of the most controversial paragraphs
in the 4/5/93 Packer article were written by a mystery writer, and that, by a
"straightforward clerical error," must have become "accidentally
snagged by a paper clip" and, thusly, drug into Packer's piece!
Incredible!]

In an article in the same 4/5/93 Christianity Today, "Why I
Left," Packer explains how (though not why) it took him 29 years (from
1944-1973) to see unbelief at the core of the ecumenism of the World Council of
Churches. Will it take him another 29 years to discern Harris's errors?

- Packer endorsed so-called Christian psychologist Dr. Larry
Crabb's book, Men & Women: Enjoying the Difference [Crabb's
model of counseling is primarily a psychological system of unconscious
needs motivating behavior, which is derived from Freudian
(the unconscious being a hidden reservoir of the mind with drives and impulses
which govern a person's thinking and behavior) and humanistic psychology (with
its hierarchy of needs, with great emphasis on so-called emotional needs).]:

"Larry Crabb's insight into human nature, divine grace and Christian
life yields a better blueprint for marriage than the self-absorbed,
rule-ridden role-play with which too many stop short. This is a wise and
liberating book for struggling couples -- and many others too."

- Packer also endorsed Gary
Collins' 1992 psychobabble book, You Can Make a Difference --
"Gary Collins digs us heavily into the ribs to make us ask ourselves
whether we count for God as we might, and if not, what are we going to do about
it. Here is therapy, spiritual and commonsensical, that will do a lot of us a
lot of good."

- Sometimes one wonders if J.I. Packer even knows how to identify heresy
anymore. Tony
Campolo is a theological liberal and a radical political socialist whose
teachings are heretical at best and blasphemous at worst. In 1983, he wrote a
book titled A Reasonable Faith, in which he contends that Jesus
Christ is mystically incarnate in every human being, not just those born
again. Nevertheless, a four-member panel, headed by J.I. Packer, cleared Campolo
of any heresy, merely labeling the book "methodologically naive and
verbally incautious" containing "some involuntary unorthodoxies of
substance as well as some calculated unconventionalities in presentation"
(9/20/85, Christianity Today, pp. 30-38; and 12/13/85, Christianity
Today, p. 52). (Packer
also endorsed Campolo's Wake Up America!
by Zondervan.)

- Tony Campolo has said that the people who
make up the Christian Coalition represent only a minority of the Christian
community. To counter the perception that the coalition is the sole voice for
the believing community in the political arena, Campolo, along with other
colleagues who do not identify themselves as part of the so-called Religious
Right, launched a group called "Call for Renewal." On 5/23/95, Campolo
and his group of self-proclaimed evangelicals called a news conference. They
said they had had enough of politics as usual and stepped forward claiming to
have a new vision for transcending Left and Right. Over one hundred
"Christian leaders" from "a diversity of traditions" signed
a document called the Cry for Renewal. The Call mounted its campaign both to
dissent publicly from the Coalition's policies and perceived allegiances and to
develop "a new way" for Christians to engage in politics (10/7/96, Christianity Today; and Renegade
Prophet?:
A Look at the Teachings of Tony Campolo). In actuality, Campolo's
organization is nothing but a front for liberal theology.

Some well
known names signing on to the Cry for Renewal include; Steve Haynor,
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship; Karen and David Mains, Chapel of the Air
Ministries; Ted Engstrom, World Vision; Phillip Yancey; and J.I.Packer.
These names are posted next to those Professor Ron Nash calls, "militantly
evangelical." Some of the clearly non-evangelical names on the list are
Marion Wright Edelman, Children's Defense Fund; Dr. James Forbes, Riverside
Church; Joan Brown Campbell, General Secretary of the National Council of
Churches; Mary Dennis, Maryknoll Justice and Peace; Roman Catholic J. Bryan
Hehir; Dr. Paul Sherry, President of the United Church of Christ denomination
and Edmond L. Browning of the Episcopal Church.

- Packer is on Renovaré's "Board of Reference" -- Renovaré is
an international, New
Age, ecumenical organization that emanates from the religious traditions of
Quakerism, whose message is that today's Church is missing out on some wonderful
spiritual experiences that can only be found by studying and practicing the
"meditative" and "contemplative" lifestyle "of early
Christianity." In actuality, Renovaré espouses the use of the early pagan
traditions of guided
imagery and visualization, astral projection, "Zen" prayer
techniques for meditation (i.e., Buddhism), and Jungian
psychology (i.e., a blend of Eastern mysticism and Roman Catholic mystical
spiritual tradition, which nicely fits the New Age model), all as means of
obtaining "personal spiritual renewal" in the lives of believers. (For
a more detailed analysis of Renovaré and the teachings of its co-directors,
psychologist Richard Foster and William Vaswig, see Media Spotlight's
Special Report of March, 1992: "Renovaré: Taking Leave of One's
Senses.")

- Packer allows for women's
ordination, and thereby, women preachers, as long as they are "properly
supervised" by men! He states that, "Since authority rests in the
Word of God rather than in preachers and teachers of either sex, it is my
opinion that a woman's preaching and teaching gifts may be used to the
full in situations where a male minister of the Word has the effect of
supplementing and supporting his own preaching and teaching." He then
justifies this effective nullification of the Word of God with the
somewhat flippant statement that, "We in the West are no longer in the
Bibleless situation to which I Tim. 2:12 was directed" (2/11/91, Christianity
Today). (Emphases added.)

- More than 100 so-called evangelical leaders and academics, having
declared Biblical faith is essential to solving environmental problems,
called on Christians to make their lives and churches "centers of
creation's care and renewal." The statement, "An Evangelical
Declaration on the Care of Creation," had been in preparation for more than
a year. It is the joint effort of the Evangelical Environmental Network's World
Vision (the neo-evangelical/ecumenical relief and humanitarian agency) and
radical social action group Evangelicals for Social Action (a network of
professing Christians involved in a broad range of public policy issues). (The
Evangelical Environmental Network is also part of the National Religious
Partnership, which includes the National Council of Churches, the U.S. Catholic
Conference, and the Consultation on Jewish Life and the Environment.) Though the
statement carefully distances evangelical views of the environment from aspects
of ecological spirituality characterized as "pantheistic" and New Age,
it, nevertheless, says there is a Biblical responsibility for each person to
care for the Earth. The document was drafted by a number of neo-evangelical
leaders, including World Vision President Robert Seiple, Evangelicals for Social
Action President Ron Sider, and Susan Drake, an organizer of the 1993 U.N. Earth
Summit in Rio. Signers of the statement included J.I.Packer.
(Reported in the 4/4/94, Christian News.)

- Eugene
Peterson's The Message has swept into Christian bookstores,
homes, and churches from coast to coast. In the first four months after its
mid-July, 1993 release, 100,000 copies of this "New Testament in
contemporary English" were printed by NavPress and 70,000 books were sold.
Apparently, most readers were delighted: "The Message is so
good it leaves me breathless," wrote popular New Age author Madeleine
L'Engle in her endorsement. J.I. Packer has also endorsed The
Message: "In this crowded world of Bible versions, Eugene Peterson's
blend of accurate scholarship and vivid idiom make this rendering both
distinctive and distinguished. The Message catches the logical
flow, personal energy, and imaginative overtones of the original very well
indeed."

But The Message teaches a different gospel and a different morality
than the Bible (as well as a worldly/warm fuzzy view of life). For example, The
Message translates Jesus' statement in John 14:28, "The Father is
the goal and purpose of my life," versus the Bible's "...The Father is
greater than I." In l Cor. 6:18-20, the words "sexual immorality"
are deleted and the words "avoids commitment and intimacy" are added.
(One could conclude that "commitment and intimacy," not marriage, set
the boundaries for acceptable sex.) In Rom. 1:26-27, the words "God gave
them over ..." are deleted and words that qualify homosexuality are added
(providing a loophole for committed homosexuals who "love" each other;
thus lust becomes the sin, not the choice of a same-sex partner). There are
hundreds of examples like these in The Message.

Peterson himself, in his introduction to The Message, says,
"This version of the New Testament in a contemporary idiom keeps the
language of The Message current and fresh and understandable in the
same language in which we do our shopping, talk with our friends, worry about
world affairs, and teach our children their table manners ..." This all
sounds like an excuse for "dumbing-down" Scripture to match our
culture's downward trends. Should we then rewrite God's holy Scriptures to fit
our more shallow and worldly communications? And what does it say about a man
like J.I. Packer when he endorses it as an authentic translation of the Bible
rather than as Peterson's personal, politically correct interpretation. (Also
endorsing The Message were Warren Wiersbe and Jack
Hayford.) [Adapted from "What
Kind of Message is THE MESSAGE?" an article by Berit Kjos.]

- The 2/88 issue of the Catholic charismatic magazine New Covenant
carried a series of interviews with leaders from various parts of Christendom.
The same question was asked of each of these leaders: "Where is renewal
happening in the Catholic Church?" J.I. Packer was among
those interviewed and his reply was significant:

"I see two streams of renewal flowing. ... One is a renewal of true
godliness. This stream runs mainly, though not exclusively, in charismatic
channels. ... The second stream is a renewal of authentic supernaturalism...
Though I do not enthuse about the papacy and the Curia as institutions,
pronouncements from both sources since John Paul II took over have seemed to
me, not indeed infallible, but bracing expressions of this convictional
renewal. ... It is as these two streams of renewal continue to flow, and
hopefully converge, that the Catholic Church will give most to the rest of
Christendom and to the benighted pagan world of our time."

How Packer can see signs of renewal in a totally apostate entity like the
Roman Catholic Church is beyond the logic of any discerning Bible-believer (Flirting
With Rome, Vol. 2, p. 35).

- Inclusivism teaches that
adult adherents of other religions can be saved by being good adherents of their
own religions. This is the natural conclusion of pluralism. If no one is right,
then everyone is right. Who are evangelical Christians to make the absurd claim
that only they have found the key to eternal life? Such an attitude we expect
from the unbeliever, but as postmodernism invades the church, inclusivism is
rapidly being accepted there as well. J.I. Packer writes, "We can
safely say (i) if any good pagan reached the point of throwing himself on His
Maker's mercy for pardon, it was grace that brought him there; (ii) God will
surely save anyone he brings thus far; (iii) anyone thus saved would learn in
the next world that he was saved through Christ" (God’s Words, p.
210). [This is identical to the heretical teaching of C.S. Lewis—he says some
pagans may "belong to Christ without knowing it" (Mere
Christianity, pp. 176-177), and "Christ fulfils both Paganism and
Judaism ..." (Reflections on the Psalms, p.129).] (Reported in Think on These
Things – Postmodernism, Pt. IV, January 2003.)

- Announced at a press conference on 3/29/94 was an ecumenical declaration
titled "Evangelicals and Catholics Together: The Christian Mission in the
Third Millennium" (ECT).
The negotiations toward the declaration were initiated in 9/92 by Chuck
Colson and Richard Neuhaus (former liberal Lutheran clergyman [ELCA] turned
Catholic priest) under the auspices of the ecumenical and theologically liberal
Institute on Religion and Public Life (headed by Neuhaus). The declaration
starts with, "We are Evangelical Protestants and Roman Catholics who have
been led through prayer, study, and discussion to common convictions about
Christian faith and mission." It goes down-hill from there. The coalition
specifically called for an end to aggressive proselytizing of each other's
flocks (in effect, a mutual non-aggression pact). The signers of the Accord also
confessed their past sins against Catholic/Protestant unity.

The declaration said: "All who accept Christ as Lord and Savior are
brothers and sisters in Christ." This conveniently ignores the fact that
Catholics espouse a works-salvation false gospel! In a revealing admission of
what brought these groups together, some signers said it was the experiences of
worshiping together in the charismatic movement and working together in
political causes such as anti-abortion [Moral Majority for example]. In fact,
one writer correctly assessed that the declaration "amounts to a truce on
theological issues so that the parties can continue to cooperate on political
issues."

Forty people signed or endorsed the document (20 Catholics and 20 so-called
evangelicals), including Protestants J.I. Packer, Pat
Robertson, Bill
Bright, Os Guinness, and Mark Noll (a historian at Wheaton College who said,
"Evangelicals can no longer consider Catholics as ogres or anti-Christs").
Catholic endorsers included six priests, three bishops, one Archbishop, and one
Cardinal. By joint declaration, then, J.I. Packer and friends have, in effect,
declared the Protestant Reformation a tragic mistake!

In an article in the 12/12/94 Christianity Today ("Why I
Signed It," pp. 34-37), Packer says he endorsed the accord because "it
affirms positions and expresses attitudes" that have been his "for
half a lifetime"! Packer also said that he has "... long thought that
informal grassroots collaboration with Roman Catholics in ministry is the most
fruitful sort of ecumenism that one can practice nowadays," and that
"evangelicals and Catholics who actively believe are Christians together
... united in the one Body of Christ, joint-heirs not only with Him but with
each other. ... ecclesiastically divided Christians should not settle for doing
separately anything that their consciences allow them to do together."
Packer knows that Catholics do not preach the gospel, but since they focus on
many of the same things that evangelicals do, Packer claims, "This
constitutes a sufficient account of the gospel of salvation for shared
evangelistic ministry." Just how far Packer is willing to compromise is
evident when he states, "We need to put sola
fide in small print because it is no longer one of the large-print issues
that ought to divide us, nor should it divide us in common mission."
According to Packer, then, ecumenicity before truth!

Moreover, according to Packer, those refusing to join in this ecumenical spirit
are in sin!: "Where there is fellowship in faith, fellowship in service
should follow, and the cherishing of standoffishness and isolationism becomes
sin." Bottom line for Packer: "... present needs of both church and
community in North America ... cry out for an alliance of good evangelical
Protestants with good Roman Catholics (and good Eastern Orthodox, too)." To
J.I. Packer, it matters not that Catholics deny the heart of the gospel of
Christ (i.e., the Catholic belief in baptismal
regeneration alone should be enough for evangelicals to separate from
Catholics), as long as Catholics are active participants in their church, that
makes them Christian! And to Packer, for true Christians to obey God's commands
to separate from error, that is sin! How ludicrous! What insanity!

The ECT Accord generated so much heat in Protestant ranks, that Colson found it
necessary to call a meeting in January, 1995 to try "to achieve a measure
of understanding, clarification, and harmony around the truth recognized by
historic orthodoxy" (1/25/95, Prison Fellowship News Release --
"Evangelical Leaders Resolve Differences On Evangelical-Catholic
Paper"). Attending the 1/19/95 peace meeting (held at Catholic-sympathizer
D. James Kennedy's Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida)
were ECT signers Colson, Packer, Bright, and Kent Hill, along
with a group of so-called evangelicals critical of the ECT (i.e., the
"anti-ECT group") -- John Ankerberg, John
MacArthur, R.C.
Sproul, D.
James Kennedy, Joseph Stowell, Michael
Horton, and John Woodbridge.

After the meeting, Colson, Bright, Packer, and Hill issued a joint doctrinal
statement supposedly clarifying their position on the ECT. However,
no changes to the ECT were recommended, nor would any of the original
signators remove their names from it. In fact, in June of 1995, Packer
co-authored a document with Michael Horton titled, "Resolutions for Roman
Catholic and Evangelical Dialogue." The document encourages Catholics and
Evangelicals to join together when "Christian values and behavioral
patterns are at stake," but this union is not to be regarded as agreement
in doctrine! It also accepts as fact that the Roman Catholic Church contains
many believers.

Then in late-1995, Evangelicals and Catholics Together: Toward a Common
Mission, edited by Colson and Neuhaus, was published. The book is a
collection of essays defending the ECT, including one essay by J.I.
Packer. The overall thesis of the book is that evangelicals and
Catholics need each other to reform decaying culture obsessed with destructive
individualism and materialism, and that the Christian gospels compel a unity
between sincere Christians regardless of different, even irreconcilable
theologies. (Reported in the 12/23/95, Houston Chronicle.) [Signers of ECT I also signed
the second ECT manifesto on 11/12/97, titled "The Gift of Salvation."]

-Dr. Bill Jackson, president of the Association of
Fundamentalists Evangelizing Catholics (AFEC), prepared a 6/18/99 statement on
"The Gospel of Jesus Christ—An Evangelical Celebration" (EC) (see
the 6/14/99 Christianity Today for the
full text of the EC). This document has been endorsed by Charles Colson, Bill
Bright, and J.I. Packer, all of whom also signed the controversial ECT
documents of 1994 and 1997; as well as endorsed by R.C. Sproul, John MacArthur,
and D. James Kennedy, all of whom publicly [albeit weakly] challenged and
criticized them for signing the ECT documents. There are a number of helpful
statements in this latest document which deal with areas which were not fully
dealt with in the ECT documents (e.g., imputation is now dealt with favorably,
but has been consistently opposed by Roman Catholic Councils and Catechisms). EC
says, "We cannot embrace any form of doctrinal indifferentism by which
God's truth is sacrificed for a false peace." But there is certainly no
better example of "doctrinal indifferentism" than the ECT documents
themselves (James 1:8)! Because ECT I stated that "Evangelicals and
Catholics are brothers and sisters in Christ," in order to be relevant the
new EC document should be submitted to the Roman Catholics who signed ECT I and
II. It is difficult to see how a person could subscribe to both ECT and EC. The
only logical conclusion is for all who signed EC to remove their names from ECT.
It also appears that the so-called "evangelical" ECT endorsers have
been "let off the hook" by former critics. We believe EC will be used
to rehabilitate those who erred in 1994 and 1997, without their having to admit
or ask forgiveness for their error. (Source: 7/15/99, Calvary Contender.) [Other "evangelical" endorsers of EC
among the 15 members of the Drafting Committee and 114 members of the Endorsing
Committee include John Ankerberg, Kay Arthur, Tony Evans, Jerry
Falwell, Bill
Hybels, David
Jeremiah, D.
James Kennedy, Max
Lucado, Woodrow
Kroll, Tim
& Beverly LaHaye, Erwin
Lutzer, Bill
McCartney, Luis
Palau, Pat
Robertson, Ronald Sider, Charles
Stanley, John Stott, Joseph Stowell, Chuck
Swindoll, Bruce
Wilkinson, and Ravi Zacharias; also endorsing EC were hyper-charismatics Jack
Hayford and Steven Strang.]

However
ignorant J.I. Packer and fellow endorsers may be of all this, his participation
in EC makes him a party to its consequences. It is also important to note that
the EC document (which is supposed to be a definitive and comprehensive
statement of the true saving Gospel of Christ), never mentions repentance
for salvation, and never mentions the total depravity of man (thereby
leaning towards a decisional regeneration). Moreover, the EC promotes an
ecumenical unity (via "trans-denominational cooperative enterprises")
with all professing believers who attest to the EC's "essentials" of
the faith. But this is not the unity of the faith taught in Ephesians. While we
are instructed by Scripture to be of one mind, the evangelical today scoffs at
the idea of true Biblical unity based on complete agreement with, and submission
to, God's holy Word. The only use of the word "unity" in the New
Testament is found in Ephesians chapter four. It is a "unity of the
Spirit" (v. 3), not of men. It is a "unity of faith" (v. 13)
based on sound doctrine for which believers are to contend, not water down nor
reclassify into essentials and non-essentials (Jude 3). No real spiritual unity
can exist apart from doctrinal unity, and we are to "mark them which cause
divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid
them" (Rom. 16:17).

- The 7/02 TBC detailed Packer's latest comments concerning
Catholicism -- "Catholics and Evangelicals in Conversation" was a
conference recently presented at Wheaton College and sponsored by its Department
of Bible and Theology and InterVarsity
Press. It was a further development, and the first public endeavor of the ECT.
At the Wheaton conference, J.I. Packer shared the following: "What I dream
of and long to see is evangelicals and Roman Catholics standing together on the
same platform to tell the world that Jesus Christ is the Savior whom everybody
needs." He then amplified his vision:

"I dream of those who respond to that good gospel word being taken
through what would be a revived catechumenate [a basic instructional
program in the faith], a matter, incidentally, on which Roman Catholics, I
think, have got further in these last few years than evangelicals have. A
revived catechumenate that is a grounding for new converts in which
they are told that for the first year or two years they should postpone the
question of which church they are going to identify with, and simply
concentrate on getting the benefit of ministry of the Word and Christian
fellowship in whatever churches in their part of the world provide these.
Catholic or Protestant. And it might be either."

Packer also left no doubt as to his commitment to
the Evangelicals and Catholics Together dialogues:

"If through ECT there was for the future
less evangelical apartheid in relation to Roman Catholics than there
has been in the past, and less Roman Catholic triumphalism...and more of Roman
Catholic and evangelical together[ness] in the re-Christianizing of society
and the re-evangelizing and discipling of the world community which is so
largely drifting away from Christianity, then I should feel that we have not
failed. That's what I hope for and pray for, and it's to that effort that I
for one hope that God in this whole project will prosper what we're doing,
keep us from folly, and enable us to be as influential in these ways as [best]
we can be."

An
incredible statement considering the Catholic Church teaches that salvation is
only through the Sacrament of Baptism. Catholic teachings on salvation cannot be
reconciled to the Bible. What we have here are two gospels: the Biblical gospel,
and, in the words of the Apostle Paul, "another gospel" (Gal 1:6,7)
that can save no one. Emphasizing that point, Paul twice calls the
preachers of such a gospel "accursed" (Gal 1:8,9). How then could any
true evangelical advocate the partnership in winningsouls to Christ proposed
in Evangelicals and Catholics Together? He could not. But that fact has neither
deterred the participants of the ECT dialogue nor dampened their enthusiasm.

- Packer wrote the Foreword to Chuck
Colson's book Who Speaks for God? He describes Colson as Richard
Nixon's "fixer and hatchet man," as "remarkable" and
"gruesomely brilliant." Packer also says that Colson:

"... seeks to confront secular America with Christian truth ... to
challenge the church to biblical fidelity and obedience. ... He diagnoses our
spiritual malaise in clear and stark terms. Thank God for his clarity and
vision!"

John Robbins (editor of The
Trinity Review) says this about Packer: "The last good Foreword
J.I. Packer wrote was to John Owen's The Death of Death in the Death of
Christ. Since then he has been praising -- and presumably being well paid
for his praise -- books he hasn't read. (And that is a charitable
judgment.)" [Packer has also endorsed Colson's book The Body,
a book that calls for unity between Catholics and Protestants.]

- Packer says he does not believe that "the essence of hell is
grotesque bodily discomfort ... [that idea, he conceives] misses the deeper
point of the lurid word-pictures drawn by Dante and Jesus, and the New Testament
writers ... The essence of hell is [rather] self-hatred and God-hatred ..."
(Reported in the 12/15/9,1 Calvary Contender.) This is a
Scripturally deficient concept of hell, and sounds much like the writings of C.S.
Lewis, and more recently, Clark Pinnock and John Stott.

- Packer is a member of COR
(Coalition on Revival), a Reconstructionist/Dominionist
organization dedicated to a social gospel/activism agenda that proposes to
impose Biblical standards (e.g., Old Testament law) on unbelieving peoples and
institutions. Though Packer is no longer a Steering Committee member of COR, he
has signed its Manifesto. As an indication of what the people affiliated with
COR believe, the following is from a brochure announcing the 12th Annual
Northwest Conference for Christian Reconstruction. Does this not sound like a
different gospel? (All emphases added):

"The Christian Reconstruction movement believes that the Bible
contains not only a message of personal salvation through the blood of Christ
shed on the cross, but also a comprehensive law structure which is alone
able to provide a just basis for society. It is committed to the view that
sovereignty and thus government belong to God, and that all delegated
government, whether to family, church or state (civil government), is
to be exercised in obedience to the law of God's covenant. Furthermore, salvation
involves every aspect of man's life and thus also the relationship she
sustains to the world around him. The exercise of dominion in
accordance with the terms of God's covenant is therefore basic and vital to
the Christian faith. To neglect this is to deprecate the extent of Christ's
victory at Calvary."

-
J.I. Packer is an endorser ofthe
highly controversial and dangerous Alpha Course. It was devised by Holy Trinity
Brompton, London, a large charismatic Anglican church. Anglican priest Nicky
Gumbel began teaching it in 1990. It is now the largest evangelistic effort in
Britain and has been taken up by the main denominations and spread to the U.S.
Its philosophy is clearly New Age, leading one to experiences rooted in the
occult. The Alpha Course, originally intended for new Christians, is now aimed
at the unchurched. But at its core is a "watered down" gospel at best.
It is geared less to conversion than to seeking the spurious Toronto
Blessing experience (12/15/98, Calvary Contender).

- Based on all of the above, it is little wonder that J. I. Packer
has now seen fit to blast fundamentalism as "contentious orthodoxy."
During a speech at "Not of This World: an Ecumenical Conference for
Traditional Christians," Packer declared, "I hope we are, none of us,
fundamentalists." He said twice that fundamentalism is near to being a
"cultic heresy." During a question period after his speech, he said
that Christians should be open to different interpretations of Genesis 1-11 and
that they should have "mental elbow room" in testing the historic
creeds. (Reported in the 6/12/95, Christian News.)